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Aug 11, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 63
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some of the nsa recent advances apparently haven't been put in place at the time. they called and they said okay. ocean, desert and i said definitely ocean. desert will kick up radioactive dust and pose a danger to the community. they said fantastic. they called me back a week or two later and said we looked into it. it's too expensive to fill the test so we have to crash the plane in the desert. can you come up with a reason that we shouldn't put it in the ocean? and decide what about making sure we don't harm fish? i said what about saying they're visiting the area and this would cause an international integration? are the with the fish? [laughter] the lesson you should take from this is television advisers, and dramas do not have a lot of influence. [laughter] >> on behalf of the council and everyone here tonight, thank you for speaking. [applause] >>> due to the recent discussion on student loan rates in congress, for the next hour book tv brings you portions of author presentations about the cost of higher education. we start with a panel from june that includ
some of the nsa recent advances apparently haven't been put in place at the time. they called and they said okay. ocean, desert and i said definitely ocean. desert will kick up radioactive dust and pose a danger to the community. they said fantastic. they called me back a week or two later and said we looked into it. it's too expensive to fill the test so we have to crash the plane in the desert. can you come up with a reason that we shouldn't put it in the ocean? and decide what about making...
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Aug 11, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN
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eye 85
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i somehow attribute it to the nsa. the nsa is not the irs. let's make that clear. i would not for a moment give these powers to the irs. the nsa is probably under more surveillance -- which is ironic any otherthan operation in our country today. it is watch on a regular basis i the fisa court. i do not think we need a fisa court. has thethe president power as commander-in-chief to carry out these operations. that is what president bush claimed in the early to thousands. that is what the court has said. the reality is we will have a fisa court. in any event, it is monitored on a regular basis. 30 day reports. six month reports. if when they are tracking -- last year, only 300 times were they had to drill down a numbers -- if they make a mistake and put the wrong digit , they have to do a full report on that. they have to purge everything they got. they have to file a report with that one explaining human error that was made. that is the type of scrutiny that it is under. my experience on the intelligence committee with the nsa was, what we heard over the last severa
i somehow attribute it to the nsa. the nsa is not the irs. let's make that clear. i would not for a moment give these powers to the irs. the nsa is probably under more surveillance -- which is ironic any otherthan operation in our country today. it is watch on a regular basis i the fisa court. i do not think we need a fisa court. has thethe president power as commander-in-chief to carry out these operations. that is what president bush claimed in the early to thousands. that is what the court...
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50
Aug 18, 2013
08/13
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FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 50
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person, the nsa cannot listen to your telephone calls and the nsa cannot target your e-mails. >> then we feignind out, well, e they are but if they are, it is to combat terrorism. >> as i've said, this program is an important tool in our effort to disrupt terrorist plots and it does not allow the government to listen to any phone call without a warrant. >> yeah. like the phone call of the boston bombers. i forgot, you didn't know anything about them. even though the russians directed you to them a number of time and tamerlan should never have been allowed in the country and should have been stopped by i.s.e. and the fbi. then again the fbi and i.c. ebs don't have a way of talking to each other. or at left a that's what they say. or you need this program so that you can give the nypd a phone number in that case that they were already on top of. so now the administration says, don't worry. the fisa court protects us. it is only with that court's approval that any calls can be monitored. except enter the chief judge of the foreign intelligence surveillance court. he says that his court l
person, the nsa cannot listen to your telephone calls and the nsa cannot target your e-mails. >> then we feignind out, well, e they are but if they are, it is to combat terrorism. >> as i've said, this program is an important tool in our effort to disrupt terrorist plots and it does not allow the government to listen to any phone call without a warrant. >> yeah. like the phone call of the boston bombers. i forgot, you didn't know anything about them. even though the russians...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
169
169
Aug 13, 2013
08/13
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WHUT
tv
eye 169
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so the nsa is taking it without my permission. google is taking it because that's my price for doing business with them. >> they had 134,000 e-mails, data about his 2,000-plus contacts, knew what he searched for and what he talked to on the telephone, et cetera. et cetera. what do you think of that? >> well, if it's me, i would say the fbi's file on me is probably larger. that's what i'd be most worried about. look, no. i tend to agree here. and this idea, john, of individuals saying you can't have this or that, i don't know how that works when the nsa obviously isn't that interested in me. but some terrorist is going to say, i'd prefer if you fellows didn't have my phone records and all the rest of it. but, you know, i'm beginning to think that the congress of the united states should rightly take a look at this and sort of limit and we should argue out exactly what they can hold and how long. >> well, they are looking at it. and the president, in his press conference on friday, basically said he wants to work with the congress o
so the nsa is taking it without my permission. google is taking it because that's my price for doing business with them. >> they had 134,000 e-mails, data about his 2,000-plus contacts, knew what he searched for and what he talked to on the telephone, et cetera. et cetera. what do you think of that? >> well, if it's me, i would say the fbi's file on me is probably larger. that's what i'd be most worried about. look, no. i tend to agree here. and this idea, john, of individuals...
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Aug 19, 2013
08/13
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WUSA
tv
eye 76
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. >> a new twist in nsa investigation, find out why a man has the white house answering questions. >> massive wild fire out west tackling the blaze the size of denver, gary? >> big fire. we have clouds, no real showers if you are headed to the game, weather wise no issues. here is what it looks like out there now. it is going to start feeling more like august. we have a first look at your forecast all coming up, stay with us. >> the unrest continues in egypt nearly a week after a government crack down after oust of president morsi. two dozen security policeman were killed execution style. in all nearly 1,000 people killed between security forces and morsi supporters since last wednesday. there is word tonight that former president hosni mubarak could be released. a final verdict in all of his cases. mubarak and sons accused of embezzling and killing protesters. >> more fallout over the leaked nsa documents by edward snowden. lawmakers calling for more classified hearings, while at least one center says it is time to get a closer look at the domestic programs.
. >> a new twist in nsa investigation, find out why a man has the white house answering questions. >> massive wild fire out west tackling the blaze the size of denver, gary? >> big fire. we have clouds, no real showers if you are headed to the game, weather wise no issues. here is what it looks like out there now. it is going to start feeling more like august. we have a first look at your forecast all coming up, stay with us. >> the unrest...
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Aug 19, 2013
08/13
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FOXNEWSW
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eye 94
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new allegations rock the nsa. documents leaked why former nsa contractor edward snowden detail thousands of privacy violations by the agency after repeated denials from the white house. >> what you are not reading about is the government actually abusing these programs. >> john: we'll discuss with a key member of the homeland security committee and critic of the nsa kentucky senator rand paul. then, another week of chaos in egypt as the interim government's crackdown on supporters of ousted president mohammed morsi leaves hundreds of people dead. >> our traditional cooperation cannot continue
new allegations rock the nsa. documents leaked why former nsa contractor edward snowden detail thousands of privacy violations by the agency after repeated denials from the white house. >> what you are not reading about is the government actually abusing these programs. >> john: we'll discuss with a key member of the homeland security committee and critic of the nsa kentucky senator rand paul. then, another week of chaos in egypt as the interim government's crackdown on supporters...
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4.1K
Aug 24, 2013
08/13
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KCSM
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whethenow to an ongoing issue oe nsa. it has been the subject of controversy since the lakes of edward snowden which demonstrated the agency was spying on american citizens and breaking court order drills to do so. in a new interview, president obama said this over -- about the oversight of the nsa. >> what was learned was nsa had in it ridley, -- inadvertently pulled the files of americans in violation of their own rules. they presented those problems to the court. the court said, this is not going to cut it. you will improve the safeguards and this is what happened. >> note how president obama the rule violations were accidental. this account ridley contradicts a statement the nsa has made. it said, " rare instances of violations of authority have been found" so not all of these violations were accidental. the president was right when he said fisa courts demanded it makes changes to its surveillance program. "the guardian" has a story about efforts to wring nsa into compliance with court orders. using new leaks from edw
whethenow to an ongoing issue oe nsa. it has been the subject of controversy since the lakes of edward snowden which demonstrated the agency was spying on american citizens and breaking court order drills to do so. in a new interview, president obama said this over -- about the oversight of the nsa. >> what was learned was nsa had in it ridley, -- inadvertently pulled the files of americans in violation of their own rules. they presented those problems to the court. the court said, this...
1,758
1.8K
Aug 2, 2013
08/13
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LINKTV
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, and read your statement from a former nsa employee and william binney who recently said the nsa is putting together dossiers on every u.s. citizen, listing who we have relations with, what our activities are. is there any truth to that and why do stories like this persists? it isn't true., we're not putting dossiers up on every u.s. citizen. in fact, we don't have a dossier on you. i have never seen one of your e- mails from an intelligence perspective or otherwise, actually. from my perspective, these are grossly out of the truth. they really are. to think we would be collecting on every u.s. person, one, that would be against the law for you and two, we get great oversight by all breaches of the government. i must have been bad when i was a kid. we get supervised by the defense department. o.ey see everything we do rea by the white house, by the congress, and by the court. so all branches of government can see what we're doing is correct. so my concern is that false statements like these seem to persist. you see them bounce around. it only hurts because people think, well, they m
, and read your statement from a former nsa employee and william binney who recently said the nsa is putting together dossiers on every u.s. citizen, listing who we have relations with, what our activities are. is there any truth to that and why do stories like this persists? it isn't true., we're not putting dossiers up on every u.s. citizen. in fact, we don't have a dossier on you. i have never seen one of your e- mails from an intelligence perspective or otherwise, actually. from my...
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84
Aug 20, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 84
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we get information from other agencies that they collect whether nsa, fbi. we are not collecting it. it is the lawfully connect the -- collected. it came after 2009 that we do not have access to some of the types of information that would help us like the underwear bomber. we had great access to threat information coming from the reports provided to us by cia, the nsa. what we do not have is the kind of access we needed to non-terrorism databases. information about individuals applying for refugee status in the united states or for visas. because what we need to do is have information and not just for a minute or a day or a week but long enough so we have the rate information from the cia, from a source, all we have is a name or a first name, what we do to compare the information to the other information we have also collected at the government has about people traveling care or seeking asylum so that we can then provided to the agencies that can act on it? it is my perspective that we were already doing it will be somewhat surprised i would have trouble doi
we get information from other agencies that they collect whether nsa, fbi. we are not collecting it. it is the lawfully connect the -- collected. it came after 2009 that we do not have access to some of the types of information that would help us like the underwear bomber. we had great access to threat information coming from the reports provided to us by cia, the nsa. what we do not have is the kind of access we needed to non-terrorism databases. information about individuals applying for...
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133
Aug 24, 2013
08/13
by
FOXNEWS
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eye 133
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a three in four chance the nsa may be watching you on the internet. wait a minute, i thought they said this wouldn't happen. getting your vegetables every day? when i can. [ bop ] [ male announcer ] could've had a v8. two full servings of vegetables for only 50 delicious calories. but with advair, i'm breathing better. so now i can help make this a great block party. ♪ [ male announce ] advair is clinically proven to help significantly improve lung function. unlike most copd medications, advair contains both an anti-inflammatory and a long-acting bronchodilator working together to help improve your lung function all day. advair won't replace fast-acting inhalers for sudden symptoms a a tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking advair. ask your doctor if including advair could help improve your lung function. [ male announcer ] advair diskus fluticasone propionate and salmeterol inhalation powder. get your first prescription free and save on refills at advaircopd.com. >>> live from america's news headquarters
a three in four chance the nsa may be watching you on the internet. wait a minute, i thought they said this wouldn't happen. getting your vegetables every day? when i can. [ bop ] [ male announcer ] could've had a v8. two full servings of vegetables for only 50 delicious calories. but with advair, i'm breathing better. so now i can help make this a great block party. ♪ [ male announce ] advair is clinically proven to help significantly improve lung function. unlike most copd medications,...
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Aug 6, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 69
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let's start with the nsa. how widespread does the revelation show their surveillance programs are of u.s. citizens? >> i think it was a shock to everyone about what we learned from snowden's revelation. the nsa is collecting information on potentially every american. it is from telephone metadata. that is pretty much every call you have made. they store that data for five years. >> what happens to it after that? >> well, we do not really know. they say they can only store it for five years, so in theory, it has to be destroyed after that. another program we are learning about collected e-mail metadata. so they are doing e-mail, too. they say that ended in 2011. >> walk us through the metadata. what exactly is that? why is it important in this data collection program? >> when you are investigating terrorism, what you are looking for is not just individual people, but networks. if you found one person, you're interested and who else is working with them? you want to look at who they communicate with. this inform
let's start with the nsa. how widespread does the revelation show their surveillance programs are of u.s. citizens? >> i think it was a shock to everyone about what we learned from snowden's revelation. the nsa is collecting information on potentially every american. it is from telephone metadata. that is pretty much every call you have made. they store that data for five years. >> what happens to it after that? >> well, we do not really know. they say they can only store it...
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48
Aug 17, 2013
08/13
by
FBC
tv
eye 48
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with the nsa demands in a speech read what anyone else would call ridiculous. hundreds of cases of supposedly unintended interception of u.s.
with the nsa demands in a speech read what anyone else would call ridiculous. hundreds of cases of supposedly unintended interception of u.s.
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130
Aug 12, 2013
08/13
by
WBAL
tv
eye 130
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there has got to be more transparency. >> am planning to improve privacy within the nsa. a live report from our washington bureau. a titleord messiah is that has onlytle been earned by one person. >> there is a court battle over a baby's name. good morning. i'm stan stovall. >> i'm mindy basara. thank you for joining us this morning.. >> 5:01. time for traffic and weather together on the 1's. >> we have a lot of cloud cover. we are ready to get to a sunny day. a cold front is going to come through. you can feel the humidity. there are some light showers in pennsylvania. a couple of sprinkles near york. 77 downtown. 69 in cockeysville. a mild start to the day. highs in the mid 80's. we will watch those rain chances increase tomorrow. more details coming up. >> good morning. just getting word of an accident at liberty road on the inner loop. you may start to see some delays. this is in the outer loop near baltimore national pike. so far so good. we are expecting inner loop delays around liberty road. there is some road work. southbound 295 looks pretty good down towards 100
there has got to be more transparency. >> am planning to improve privacy within the nsa. a live report from our washington bureau. a titleord messiah is that has onlytle been earned by one person. >> there is a court battle over a baby's name. good morning. i'm stan stovall. >> i'm mindy basara. thank you for joining us this morning.. >> 5:01. time for traffic and weather together on the 1's. >> we have a lot of cloud cover. we are ready to get to a sunny day. a...
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117
Aug 6, 2013
08/13
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 117
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it is not just nsa intercepts. it is informant information, ation with wiretaps in one case and using them for a second case. that a large database of phone records. phoneer they get a records for someone suspected of involvement in drugs or gang involvement from the dea, they put all of those timbers into one giant database and use that information to compare different cases. all of the collection seems legitimate in terms of being court ordered. what troubled some critics is the fact they are hiding that information from drug defendant to face trial. the problem with that is, if these defendants won't know about some potentially that mayry information affect their case and the right to a fair trial. >> explain exactly how this information is being hidden from judges, prosecutors, and sometimes defense attorneys as well. >> sure. just to give you an example, through any of these four different ways including the nsa intercepts, the dea's special operations division will send the information to a dea agent in the f
it is not just nsa intercepts. it is informant information, ation with wiretaps in one case and using them for a second case. that a large database of phone records. phoneer they get a records for someone suspected of involvement in drugs or gang involvement from the dea, they put all of those timbers into one giant database and use that information to compare different cases. all of the collection seems legitimate in terms of being court ordered. what troubled some critics is the fact they are...
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Aug 16, 2013
08/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 209
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plus, the new nsa documents. they are -- their spy something worse than we ever knew they have read our emails and listened to our phone calls thousands of times a year. simple mistakes or a pattern of abuse. tonight, the latest leak about the nsa. and, a paralimp i don't paraolympian denied a chance because she could walk again some day. >> i didn't expect this at all. it's pretty shocking. >> they landed her a loss tonight before she could even get in the game. still, this teenager isn't finished with her fight. plus, it's been cloaked in mystery since its creation. >> welcome to area 51. >> now the cia decleafs documents that show what really went on at area 51. why are some sections still a secret? and that is first from fox this friday night. no little green men. no flying saucers. but after decades of denying that area 51 exists now an admission. the documents prove it is very real. but the conspiracy theories are going nowhere. not by a long shot. area 51 is the then secret base in the middle of the nevada
plus, the new nsa documents. they are -- their spy something worse than we ever knew they have read our emails and listened to our phone calls thousands of times a year. simple mistakes or a pattern of abuse. tonight, the latest leak about the nsa. and, a paralimp i don't paraolympian denied a chance because she could walk again some day. >> i didn't expect this at all. it's pretty shocking. >> they landed her a loss tonight before she could even get in the game. still, this...
136
136
Aug 10, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN
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eye 136
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i would director of nsa for six years. an essay is very famous for its offense is quite -- nsa is very famous for its offense in squad. going in stealing stuff. about a fifth of the agency is defense. it also has the responsibility of protecting government secrets in the united states. not every country in the world has organized its intelligence center that way, to put the offense and defense in the same organization. we have done it that way. i think we have done it well and correctly. we have done it that way because offense and defense rotated around the same concept. that concept is vulnerability. if you mastered the vulnerability you can play offense, if you master the vulnerability you can play defense. and the life of nsa -- let's go pre-cyber. in the life of nsa, you always had a trade-off between the two squads. when you discover a vulnerability, do you want to exploit it to play offense or do you want to fix it to play defense? back in the pre-cyber world we had a pretty well-worn road as to where the line is. i
i would director of nsa for six years. an essay is very famous for its offense is quite -- nsa is very famous for its offense in squad. going in stealing stuff. about a fifth of the agency is defense. it also has the responsibility of protecting government secrets in the united states. not every country in the world has organized its intelligence center that way, to put the offense and defense in the same organization. we have done it that way. i think we have done it well and correctly. we...
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94
Aug 1, 2013
08/13
by
KPIX
tv
eye 94
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when we first heard about the nsa surveillance going on, we heard about program called prism. now, how is prism different than the x key score. >> that's right. okay. prism is when the nsa targets orders to specific silicon valley companies to get information on specific foreign terror suspects. x key core is much wider in scope. one description that it's like vacuuming a who will room on americans. sharon, thank you for that. >>> new revelations tonight in the case of the three women held hostage for years in the cleveland house. documents show how arielle castro lured them to his basement in the first place. amanda barry, gina dejesus and michelle knight kept diaries. instead they were chained up and raped repeatedly over the years. if he wanteded to punish them, he kept them in the cold basement or the sweltering attic. they got one meal a day and one shower a week. last friday, castro pled guilty to rape, kidnapping and aggravated murder. he'll spend the rest of his life in prison. >>> starting tomorrow, two more states will ring wedding bells for gay and lesbian couples.
when we first heard about the nsa surveillance going on, we heard about program called prism. now, how is prism different than the x key score. >> that's right. okay. prism is when the nsa targets orders to specific silicon valley companies to get information on specific foreign terror suspects. x key core is much wider in scope. one description that it's like vacuuming a who will room on americans. sharon, thank you for that. >>> new revelations tonight in the case of the three...
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242
Aug 16, 2013
08/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 242
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all as a part of nsa's internal over site and compliance efforts. critics say it's ingrained in the system. >> a lot of what happens in the agency even the nsa is a refreks from the culture from the top. you have a president and administration that revels in bei going beyond the box if you will that they are limited to by law. and i think that seeped all of the way down into the nsa. >> just last week if you remember the president reminding the american people of the legality of the program. >> now, keep in mind that as a senator i expressed a healthy skepticism about these programs. as president i have taken steps to make sure that they have strong over sight by all three branchs of government. >> the chief judge of the report reportedly said the court doesn't have the tools to check if the government breaks the sur ray lens scho -- sur slains too. >> edward snowden saying in a new statement that journalists have been misled about his legal situation by people associated with his father. he said quote, i asked journalists to understand they do not
all as a part of nsa's internal over site and compliance efforts. critics say it's ingrained in the system. >> a lot of what happens in the agency even the nsa is a refreks from the culture from the top. you have a president and administration that revels in bei going beyond the box if you will that they are limited to by law. and i think that seeped all of the way down into the nsa. >> just last week if you remember the president reminding the american people of the legality of the...
50
50
Aug 7, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 50
favorite 0
quote 0
and the life of nsa -- let's go pre-cyber. nsa, you always had a trade-off between the two squads. when you discover a vulnerability, do you want to exploit it to play offense or do you want to fix it to play defense? back in the pre-cyber world we had a pretty well-worn road as is.here the line i am willing to enter into a debate that that line might not be in the wrong place. that the old approach to it, the old calculation -- i want to keep that home ability because i want to use it in the future -- might actually be technically correct, operationally sound in a discrete one-off decision kind cumulative effect of the discreetly correct decisions has been a real strategic problem that industry vulnerabilities out there. i actually think the trend line and the more we can accelerate it, the better. it will go too far. you know how it works. and we will pick it back a little bit. but i think the trend line now is in the direction of more defense, even if it has to be at the expense of offense. the degree of what we need to do with the trendline is to accelerate it, because i think
and the life of nsa -- let's go pre-cyber. nsa, you always had a trade-off between the two squads. when you discover a vulnerability, do you want to exploit it to play offense or do you want to fix it to play defense? back in the pre-cyber world we had a pretty well-worn road as is.here the line i am willing to enter into a debate that that line might not be in the wrong place. that the old approach to it, the old calculation -- i want to keep that home ability because i want to use it in the...
75
75
Aug 18, 2013
08/13
by
CNN
tv
eye 75
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i have serious concerns about what's going on at the nsa. i think obviously we need more oversight, as senator mccain said. but i think we need to change the underlying patriot act and the fisa amendments of 2008. i voted against the reauthorization of the so-called patriot act because i believed it was too loosely written, there was room for abuse. so i think we need to undertake lots of reforms. the amendment, i don't think, did the trick, frankly. i think there are much more important things we need to be doing. >> so are you comfortable with the fact what we know now, which is that the nsa does take in every phone call number in america on a dai basis, brings it all in, keeps it in case they need to go look at it, they'll need a judge's okay for that and now we're learning that, yeah, they did make mistakes, some of which were in violation of the constitution, a judge later found out. and yet 3,000 instances, 2,000 instances not big, except some of those instances involved 3,000 americans whose e-mails or phone calls were then monitored.
i have serious concerns about what's going on at the nsa. i think obviously we need more oversight, as senator mccain said. but i think we need to change the underlying patriot act and the fisa amendments of 2008. i voted against the reauthorization of the so-called patriot act because i believed it was too loosely written, there was room for abuse. so i think we need to undertake lots of reforms. the amendment, i don't think, did the trick, frankly. i think there are much more important things...
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65
Aug 3, 2013
08/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 65
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. >> first nsa and then the fbi snooping on us. what you need to know before you log on to the computer. . that's why the internet needs a new kind of server. one that's 80% smaller. uses 89% less energy. and costs 77% less. it's called hp moonshot. and it's giving the internet the room it needs to grow. this ...is going to be big. it's time to build a better enterprise. together. ♪ you're not made of money, so don't overpay for at insurance. geico, you're not made of money, see how much you could save. . >> wayne, you are up first my man. >> i like facebook. their earnings turned up and the stock up with it. i think you can hold on to it. it is a nail before the price. >> what about it john? >> don't own it, eric. i don't trust the government and i am beating against interest rates. they can't set wages or interest rates. i am betting on short term rates going up as well. and there is a two- year bond yield. i own it. >> i got it say you are hot with this and so ten seconds. >> i think it does eapproximately in the long-term. we
. >> first nsa and then the fbi snooping on us. what you need to know before you log on to the computer. . that's why the internet needs a new kind of server. one that's 80% smaller. uses 89% less energy. and costs 77% less. it's called hp moonshot. and it's giving the internet the room it needs to grow. this ...is going to be big. it's time to build a better enterprise. together. ♪ you're not made of money, so don't overpay for at insurance. geico, you're not made of money, see how...
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122
Aug 10, 2013
08/13
by
WRC
tv
eye 122
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kerthe father of nsa lea hopes to be able to visit his son as soon as next week. owden says he has been unable to speak to his son since he leaked documents. he also wants his son to make sure he understands his legal standing in the u.s. where he has been charged with espionage. >> bob filner says he is ending therapy earlier than expected. he faces mounting pressure to resign amidst mounting sexual allegations. says he will continue counseling on it outpatient basis. last month, he said his therapy would not end until august 19. >> coming up, what kind of weather is ahead for next >> it is time to think about shopping in maryland. they are giving families the chance to save moneyball shopping for school supplies. it kicks off tomorrow and ends one week from today. clothing and shoes priced $100 or less, you will not have to pay sales tax. no limit on simultaneous purchases. >> there is still time for the montgomery county fair. s, music,joyed ride and fried food. be sure to stop by the abc 7 news booth. queen latifah has a new talk show airing right here on abc
kerthe father of nsa lea hopes to be able to visit his son as soon as next week. owden says he has been unable to speak to his son since he leaked documents. he also wants his son to make sure he understands his legal standing in the u.s. where he has been charged with espionage. >> bob filner says he is ending therapy earlier than expected. he faces mounting pressure to resign amidst mounting sexual allegations. says he will continue counseling on it outpatient basis. last month, he said...
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signalling the defunding of the nsa's phone records. they will force the government to reveal how many americans have had their information reviewed by federal agents. this as president obama on the hill today, assured lawmakers he was hearing their concerns about the reach of the nsa and even agreed to meet with a number of them at the white house tomorrow. today meetings came just hours after the administration announced they would be declassifying the now infamous secret court order compelling verizon to hand over all their american customer's phone records in bulk. that was edward snowden's first revelation, the one that kicked this whole thing off. today we got his latest. the piece published by glenn greenwald, with documents provided by snowden, details another nsa surveillance program, a top secret national security agency program that allows analysts to search with no prior authorization through vast databases containing e-mails, online chats and the browsing history of millions of individuals. those details of yet another nsa
signalling the defunding of the nsa's phone records. they will force the government to reveal how many americans have had their information reviewed by federal agents. this as president obama on the hill today, assured lawmakers he was hearing their concerns about the reach of the nsa and even agreed to meet with a number of them at the white house tomorrow. today meetings came just hours after the administration announced they would be declassifying the now infamous secret court order...
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Aug 22, 2013
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nsa admits new privacy violations. kevin johnson writing about the top intelligence officials here yen . there are other accounts of the story as well. theheard some thoughts on 35-year sentence handed down. you could make your thoughts known as well. kentucky up next. archie on the independent line. good morning. personally i think they both deserve a government of freedom. this government serves it's self and huge multinational corporations. that is all it serves. they have no interest in what we want and our rights as a citizen. privacy as out the window. this is 1984. thank you very much. host: a presidential pardon is the goal of a new web site. this is for bradley manning. in conjunction with the announcement, the support network has launched the website that connects to a petition written by amnesty international and a video with testimony from veterans and civilians from afghanistan. it will link to the official application for pardon as soon as it is available. a couple of thoughts this morning on pardon. rand
nsa admits new privacy violations. kevin johnson writing about the top intelligence officials here yen . there are other accounts of the story as well. theheard some thoughts on 35-year sentence handed down. you could make your thoughts known as well. kentucky up next. archie on the independent line. good morning. personally i think they both deserve a government of freedom. this government serves it's self and huge multinational corporations. that is all it serves. they have no interest in...
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the response of the nsa? >> it is truly shocking they are violating the surveillance laws thousands of times every year, effectively about seven times a day. in part because these laws are permissive. these aren't laws that impose meaningful restrictions. they essentially allow the nsa to collect vast amounts of information inside the united states and as we communicate internationally. the fact there are violating these very permissive laws is truly shocking. really disclosures undermine the intelligence community's primary defense of these programs, which is that there heavily regulated and overseeing. we know that is simply not true. congress is not been able to effectively oversee the nsa. now that we know the fisa court, the nsa is not able to -- in its own words, doesn't think it has the capacity to effectively oversee the nsa. the government has been claiming for years this is a regulated surveillance complex and in fact the fox has been guarding the hen house for far too long and it needs to stop. ,>
the response of the nsa? >> it is truly shocking they are violating the surveillance laws thousands of times every year, effectively about seven times a day. in part because these laws are permissive. these aren't laws that impose meaningful restrictions. they essentially allow the nsa to collect vast amounts of information inside the united states and as we communicate internationally. the fact there are violating these very permissive laws is truly shocking. really disclosures undermine...
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let's start with the nsa. how widespread does the revelation show their surveillance programs are of u.s. citizens? >> i think it was a shock to everyone about what we learned from snowden's revelation. the nsa is collecting information on potentially every american. it is from telephone metadata. that is pretty much every call you have made. they store that data for five years. >> what happens to it after that? >> well, we do not really know. they say they can only store it for five years, so in theory, it has to be destroyed after that. another program we are learning about collected e-mail metadata. so they are doing e-mail, too. they say that ended in 2011. >> walk us through the metadata. what exactly is that? why is it important in this data collection program? >> when you are investigating terrorism, what you are looking for is not just individual people, but networks. if you found one person, you're interested and who else is working with them? you want to look at who they communicate with. this inform
let's start with the nsa. how widespread does the revelation show their surveillance programs are of u.s. citizens? >> i think it was a shock to everyone about what we learned from snowden's revelation. the nsa is collecting information on potentially every american. it is from telephone metadata. that is pretty much every call you have made. they store that data for five years. >> what happens to it after that? >> well, we do not really know. they say they can only store it...
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the nsa programs would have happened. gate, president obama announced a series of reforms for the controversy all nsa surveillance program. >> we can and must be more transparent. >> including a civil liberties officer at the nsa, a high-level commission to review the intelligence program, and coordination with congress to review the program that collects telephone records. >> it is not enough for me as president to have confidence in these programs. the american people need to have confidence in them as well. >> the president insisted the changes would have taken place even if edward stone in -- even if edward snowden did not leak the nsa programs. >> i think we would have gotten to the same place. >> but do the surveillance reforms vindicate snowden? he has been charged with three felonies, it and if you think c is innocent, the president said he should return to the u.s. and stand trial. >> there were other avenues available for somebody's tensions were stirred and thought they needed to question government actions. we
the nsa programs would have happened. gate, president obama announced a series of reforms for the controversy all nsa surveillance program. >> we can and must be more transparent. >> including a civil liberties officer at the nsa, a high-level commission to review the intelligence program, and coordination with congress to review the program that collects telephone records. >> it is not enough for me as president to have confidence in these programs. the american people need...
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it is legal. >> i am talking about the nsa at all. if they get caught in a lie what will they chalk it up to? we did it for national security reasons. we are damned if we do and damned if i forget the rest of it. where are we right now? am i on caw -- cavuto? >> no, you are on oxycontin. >> starting to come down. >> you are. it is frightening, isn't it? from security to diversity, do we only spend time with our own kind? america is still pretty seg go gated, -- segregated, just the way lori rothman likes it. a new poll found 40% of whites and 20% of nonwhites don't have any friends of a different race. and if you widen the circle of acquaintances to include co-workers, 30% of americans are mixing only with people who share their pigment. the survey reported more seg go gages -- segregation more than in a poll in 2004. thanks, obama. looks like you got what you wanted. let's go to "red eye"'s race relation expert. a lot of cats today. remi, i will get you since you are almost losing control over here. >> i like cats. >> do you? >> what
it is legal. >> i am talking about the nsa at all. if they get caught in a lie what will they chalk it up to? we did it for national security reasons. we are damned if we do and damned if i forget the rest of it. where are we right now? am i on caw -- cavuto? >> no, you are on oxycontin. >> starting to come down. >> you are. it is frightening, isn't it? from security to diversity, do we only spend time with our own kind? america is still pretty seg go gated, --...
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. >> does the nsa collect any type of data at all? 1 million hundreds of millions of americans? >> nosair. john: it turns out the real answer is yes but he lied about it. >> to support the data gathering? >> if you have a problem that people and congress should have a problem with themselves because they write the laws because they are clear in specific. >> it is weird they break up and say oh my god there's gambling. what did they think we were writing these laws for? john: so much other stuff i hate about my government. data mining they areot listening to individual calls to stop the terror. >> i am for the constitution the first time we have seen a general warrant because that is flatly banned by the u.s. constitution. as a practical matter. john: during the time of the revolution. >> came george allow the troops to rummaged the homes under a general war did that was offensive they sometimes still think that is what is happening with our data. john: but it is not. soldiers are not in my house >> because your home is outside onto the internet communication with loved ones, the
. >> does the nsa collect any type of data at all? 1 million hundreds of millions of americans? >> nosair. john: it turns out the real answer is yes but he lied about it. >> to support the data gathering? >> if you have a problem that people and congress should have a problem with themselves because they write the laws because they are clear in specific. >> it is weird they break up and say oh my god there's gambling. what did they think we were writing these laws...
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. >> does the nsa collect any type of data at all? 1 million hundreds of millions of americans? >> nosair. john: it turns out the real answer is yes but he lied about it. >> to support the data gathering? >> if you have a problem that people and congress should have a problem with themselves because they write the laws because they are clear in specific. >> it is weird they break up and say oh my god there's gambling. what did they think we were writing these laws for? john: so much other stuff i hate about my government. data mining they are not listening to individual calls to stop the terror. >> i am for the constitution the first time we have seen a general warrant because that is flatly banned by the u.s. constitution. as a practical matter. john: during the time of the revolution. >> came george allow the troops to rummaged the homes under a general war did that was offensive they sometimes still think that is what is happening with our data. john: but it is not. soldiers are not in my house >> because your home is outside onto the internet communication with loved ones, t
. >> does the nsa collect any type of data at all? 1 million hundreds of millions of americans? >> nosair. john: it turns out the real answer is yes but he lied about it. >> to support the data gathering? >> if you have a problem that people and congress should have a problem with themselves because they write the laws because they are clear in specific. >> it is weird they break up and say oh my god there's gambling. what did they think we were writing these laws...
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. >>> the nsa's classified spying programs are a little less secret today with new revelations about the thousands of times the privacy rules were broken involving unauthorized surveillance of american sizs. a "washington post" review of the documents provided by edward snowden details a wide array of incidents where they violated the legal authority. some involved computer or training efforts while another involves the violation of a court order that led to the unauthorized use of data of thousands of americans. so in one specific case, the secret surveillance court that oversees the nsa only learned about a new collection method after it had been operating for months. in another example, a programming error led to a collection of calls placed from washington, d.c. after mixing up the number with egypt's international dialing code which is 2-0. another operation mixed together american and foreign e-mails. agents were also directed to remove certain details in their reports to the justice department. an official telling it the post because it's a human-run operation, there will be e
. >>> the nsa's classified spying programs are a little less secret today with new revelations about the thousands of times the privacy rules were broken involving unauthorized surveillance of american sizs. a "washington post" review of the documents provided by edward snowden details a wide array of incidents where they violated the legal authority. some involved computer or training efforts while another involves the violation of a court order that led to the unauthorized...
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let us start right off with the nsa program. i know some of it was covered in the previous panel, but i want to get into, with raj, how it actually works. i am talking about the metadata program, which was probably the biggest disclosure by edward snowden, the fact that millions and millions of records of american phone calls were being collected/stored. i will let people use the words they want. by the nsa, under a provision f the patriot act. walk us through exactly how this program works in practice. who has access to it? what can those records be used for? >> thanks for pulling this all together. what i wanted to start out with is that i firmly believe the u.s. government intelligence community, nsa in particular, needs to be as transparent as possible, consistent with our need to protect national security. it is that last piece that makes it so difficult to talk about. i would like to be as informative and helpful in this discussion as possible. the reason i say that is, it is my job as general counsel to make sure our acti
let us start right off with the nsa program. i know some of it was covered in the previous panel, but i want to get into, with raj, how it actually works. i am talking about the metadata program, which was probably the biggest disclosure by edward snowden, the fact that millions and millions of records of american phone calls were being collected/stored. i will let people use the words they want. by the nsa, under a provision f the patriot act. walk us through exactly how this program works in...
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the secret program called x key score details in these classified nsa documents apparently leaked by edward snowden. >> they have multiple ways to get at all your information, phones that you mail, your web browsing. >> reporter: mark klein blew the whistle on the nsa several years ago for mining internet and email records through at&t san francisco office and today with x key score and new technology -- >> they can store a whole dossier on everybody in the country going back years. it's frightening. >> reporter: government surveillance versus privacy took center stage at a talk tonight in oakland. x key score experts say has a massive infrastructure with hundreds of servers around the world. u.s. intelligence officials don't even need your email address to monitor your online activity. the electronic frontier foundation says it's illegal for intelligence agencies to monitor americans without a warrant. >> the government gets access first and then proves that you did something wrong second. it's not supposed to be that way. it's supposed to be the other way around. >> reporter: some
the secret program called x key score details in these classified nsa documents apparently leaked by edward snowden. >> they have multiple ways to get at all your information, phones that you mail, your web browsing. >> reporter: mark klein blew the whistle on the nsa several years ago for mining internet and email records through at&t san francisco office and today with x key score and new technology -- >> they can store a whole dossier on everybody in the country going...
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did it have anything to do with the nsa? i would say it would be very valuable for the administration once this has passed to give us more insight into how they knew. if they played a role, that's an important part of that debate. if it didn't, that's also an important part. >> all right, michael. thank you very much. >> thanks for having me. >>> the control for u.s. senate kicked off this weekend at a 133-year-old church picnic in a small kentucky town. it was the fancy farm kentucky that senate minority leader mitch mcconnell spent his first real day on the campaign trail and faced his two challengers for the first time. mcconnell is being pressured from two sides. on the left is democrat allison lundgrimes. on the right, tea party favorite matt bevin, who is challenging mcconnell in the gop primary. >> if senator mcconnell had his way, his version of kentucky health care for our seniors, grandmother, would be to walk it off. let's just tell it like it is. if the doctors told senator mcconnell that he had a kidney stone, h
did it have anything to do with the nsa? i would say it would be very valuable for the administration once this has passed to give us more insight into how they knew. if they played a role, that's an important part of that debate. if it didn't, that's also an important part. >> all right, michael. thank you very much. >> thanks for having me. >>> the control for u.s. senate kicked off this weekend at a 133-year-old church picnic in a small kentucky town. it was the fancy...
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. >>> the nsa secret surveillance program did break privacy rules thousands of times since 2008. the new revelation is the from the information from leaker edward snowden. they found that the agency had collected unauthorized data more than 2700 times and most of the time the surveillance involved americaners or foreign intelligence targets inside the u.s. for its part the nsa say a number of factors can cause the statistics to go down from one quarter to the next. >>> one of the worse kept secrets in the united states, area 51, for ufo conspiracy here toists. the country is admitting that the supersecret base does exist. there are maps of the base. even though they admit it is there they make no mention. the base is only a testing ground for aerial surveillance during the cold war. no aliens there. >>> kids here and across the country will be heading back to school in the next couple of weeks. this year back to school means a different thing in oklahoma. we take you to moore, where two schools were destroyed right at the end of the school year. >>> and aand new mother delivered
. >>> the nsa secret surveillance program did break privacy rules thousands of times since 2008. the new revelation is the from the information from leaker edward snowden. they found that the agency had collected unauthorized data more than 2700 times and most of the time the surveillance involved americaners or foreign intelligence targets inside the u.s. for its part the nsa say a number of factors can cause the statistics to go down from one quarter to the next. >>> one of...
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it is as if they are telling the nsa guys, they really shouldn't be doing. once eve 65 days you can see what marlin is doing during her time off. it was odd. >> i do agree though. it is a handful of cases. if you compare it to eating in a strawfnt it is like one fly wing in your meal. always use the metaphor even though it is incorrect. can you kill a man with a pork chop in mike baker discusses his new book "first i kill and then i eat." first, what does matt damon think of edward snowden? i will ask him when i get home. she my new nanny. ♪ ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] ultra rugged phones from sprint. buy one, get four free, and $150 credit when you swih your business line to sprint. the pioneers in push-to-talk. trouble hearing on the phone? visit sprintcaptel.com fawning. it is a story that has regurgitated yearly. he is writing at salon.com, it is a website for people who like to say the word salon. he says it does zip for our soldiers. it only boosts those who profit from war. the virginia tech english professor claims, quote, troop worship is trite and
it is as if they are telling the nsa guys, they really shouldn't be doing. once eve 65 days you can see what marlin is doing during her time off. it was odd. >> i do agree though. it is a handful of cases. if you compare it to eating in a strawfnt it is like one fly wing in your meal. always use the metaphor even though it is incorrect. can you kill a man with a pork chop in mike baker discusses his new book "first i kill and then i eat." first, what does matt damon think of...